The military said yesterday 18 September
2015 it had rescued 90 people, including
women and children, after dislodging Boko Haram Islamists from two villages in
the country’s restive northeast.
According to Acting army spokesman
Sani Usman in a statement that “troops
rescued 23 men, 33 women and 34 children from the terrorists” on Thursday in
the villages of Dissa and Balazala, which lie in the vicinity of the town of
Gwoza in Borno state-Vanguard
Gwoza was where Boko Haram declared
its so-called caliphate last year before the strategic town was recaptured by
government troops in March.
The military said it had reopened a
primary school in the town which had been shut down because of the insurgency,
and pledged to implement security measures to ensure the safety of pupils and
teachers.
“The reopening of the combined primary
school in Gwoza is significant as the eradication of Western education is part
of the aims of Boko Haram in their murderous campaign of terror,” it said.
More than 200 girls abducted from
their school in the northeastern town of Chibok in April of last year are still
being held by the Islamists in a kidnapping that shocked the world.
The military also said it intercepted
several Boko Haram fighters fleeing the battle zone disguised as internally
displaced people.
In six years of bloodshed, the Boko
Haram insurgency to carve out an Islamic state in northeast Nigeria has left at
least 15,000 dead and left more than two million others homeless.
A regional force involving troops from
Nigeria, Chad, Cameroon, Niger and Benin is about to deploy to fight the
extremists.
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